Guildford Boat House ---
River Wey
Website:
http://www.heritagenarrowboats.co.uk/
Email:
see contacts form of website
Address:
Guildford Boat House Limited,
Millbrook,
Guildford,
Surrey.
GU1 3XJ
Telephone:
01483 504494
Outside UK: +44 1483 504494
Fax:
01483 506318
Outside UK: +44 1483 506318
Base Canal / River:
River Wey
Base Marina:
Guildford Boat House
Types of Boats Offered:
2 to 12 berth Narrowboats
Periods of Hire: Short breaks and Weekly
Comments and Reviews:
Typical prices
for one week hire £896 (March) to £1556 ( Aug ) fuel included, £40
damage waiver, £30 for pets max of two.
Routes:
The Macclesfield & Peak Forest Canals
32 miles / 24 locks
To Whaley Bridge and the Head of the Peak Forest Canal.
The Caldon Canal
52 miles / 36 locks
Cruise to Froghall Wharf. There is also a 2 mile diversion to explore
the lock free Leek Branch.
The Trent and Mersey Canal
52 Miles / 38 locks
Cruise down to the Trent and Mersey to Great Haywood.
The Four Counties Ring
109 miles / 96 locks
From Marina, down the Macclesfield to the Trent and Mersey, to
Stoke on Trent, to the Staffs and Worcester, and up the Shropshire Union
to Market Drayton and Nantwich, along the Middlewich Branch back to the
Trent and Mersey back to Heritage Marina! A busy week, ideal for 10
days!
The Cheshire Ring
97 miles / 92 locks
Down the Trent and Mersey Canal, along the Bridgwater Canal, through
Manchester on the Rochdale and Ashton Canals in Manchester and back down
the Peak Forest and Macclesfield Canals to Heritage Marina. Not for the
faint hearted for those wanting a quiet week!
Suggested two week cruises
The Four Counties & Cheshire Rings
Can be easily achieved over two weeks, with extensions to Chester,
Llangollen or the Caldon Canal on the Four Counties Ring, and Chester or
Llangollen and either Wigan Pier or the Peak Forest Canal on the
Cheshire Ring.
The Llangollen (or Welsh Canal)
123 miles / 106 locks
This canal winds serenely through Cheshire and Shropshire to its
terminus at Llangollen (home to the Eisteddfod) in the Welsh Mountains
having crossed the spectacular aqueducts at Chirk and Pontcysyllte.
To Wigan Pier
133 miles / 96 locks
From Manchester it is possible to cruise the famous Barton Swing
Aqueduct over the Manchester Ship Canal. Here, in 1761 the Canal Age was
born when the Duke of Bridgwater had James Brindley design a way to
transport coal from his mines to the growing city of Manchester. Here is
not much further to Wigan Pier, the butt of many a Music Hall joke, now
home to the award winning living museum "The Way We Were".
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